Speaker

Peter Mansoor, Colonel, U.S. Army (Ret.), is the General Raymond E. Mason Jr. Chair of Military History and a frequent commentator in the media on national security affairs. He assumed his position at OSU in 2008, after a 26-year career in the U.S. Army that culminated in his service as the executive officer to General David Petraeus, Commanding General of Multi-National Force-Iraq. Professor Mansoor received his PhD from the Ohio State University. He is the author of The GI Offensive in Europe: The Triumph of American Infantry Divisions, 1941-1945 (1999), awarded the Society for Military History book of the year, Baghdad at Sunrise: A Brigade Commander’s War in Iraq (2008), awarded the Ohioana Library Association nonfiction book of the year, and Surge: My Journey with General David Petraeus and the Remaking of the Iraq War (2013), a finalist for the inaugural Guggenheim-Lehrman Military History Prize.

About The ‘The War to End All Wars: U.S. National World War I Centennial Symposium, 1916-2016’

Ohio State to Hosted ‘The War to End All Wars: U.S. National World War I Centennial Symposium, 1916-2016’ on October 27 & 28, 2016

The Department of History, in partnership with the U.S. World War One Centennial Commission, whosted a symposium marking the 100th anniversary of the war. “The War to End All Wars: U.S. National World War I Centennial Symposium, 1916-2016” was presented on the Ohio State campus on Thursday, Oct. 27, and Friday, Oct. 28.

Ohio State was chosen by the commission to host the event “because of the strength of our military history program, which is among the best if not the best in the United States,” explained Peter Mansoor, colonel, U.S. Army (retired), who is the General Raymond E. Mason, Jr. Chair of Military History. “The symposium is a wonderful opportunity to showcase our program to the local community and through webcasting to the general public and school audiences.”

The event included a keynote address Thursday evening by Sir Hew Strachan, the world’s leading historian of the First World War. Sir Strachan discussed the killing fields of 1916, the year that witnessed horrendous fighting at Verdun and on the Somme.

Each presentation section of the all day Friday symposium was preceded by a very special moment brought by Ohio State students in theatre and the arts departments. Prior to the historic informational perspectives, these students recited selections of World War I poetry and even shared a period song. It offered a poignant and powerful combination of "cleansing the mental palate" and preparation for diving into an hour-long perspective on various aspects of the war.

These presentations included:

The Military History of World War I, 1914-1918

Financing the First World War

War, Death, and Remembrance in 1914-1918

WWI and the Emerging Laws of War

Shell Shock: Core Insights of the Recent Historiography

KEYNOTE: The Redefinition of Battle: Verdun and the Somme, 1916

The symposium title “The War to End All Wars" reflects what the conflict was optimistically called, at the time. Of course it was not the last global conflict to devastate human civilization, but it was traumatic — the end of an era that witnessed the collapse of unbridled optimism and faith in Western civilization.The event organizer and host, Professor Peter Mansoor concluded with, “It’s important on this 100th anniversary to recall the horrors of the war and to revisit how World War I reshaped the world as we know it.”